4.7 Article

Simulated Impact of Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement on Atmospheric CO2 Removal in the Bering Sea

Journal

EARTHS FUTURE
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022EF002816

Keywords

single point-source ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE); electrochemical OAE; carbon dioxide removal (CDR); ocean acidification mitigation; Bering Sea; carbon uptake efficiency; ocean CDR; marine CDR; negative emissions technologies (NETs); ocean biogeochemical model

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE) has the potential to mitigate ocean acidification (OA) and induce atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) removal (CDR). The study evaluates the impacts of sustained point-source OAE in Unimak Pass, Alaska, and finds that alkalinity elevation initially mitigates OA, followed by enhanced air-to-sea CO2 exchange. Modeling shows meaningful OA mitigation and high efficiency of CO2 adjustment to the additional alkalinity in the Bering Sea.
Ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE) has the potential to mitigate ocean acidification (OA) and induce atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) removal (CDR). We evaluate the CDR and OA mitigation impacts of a sustained point-source OAE of 1.67 x 10(10) mol total alkalinity (TA) yr(-1) (equivalent to 667,950 metric tons NaOH yr(-1)) in Unimak Pass, Alaska. We find the alkalinity elevation initially mitigates OA by decreasing pCO(2) and increasing aragonite saturation state and pH. Then, enhanced air-to-sea CO2 exchange follows with an approximate e-folding time scale of 5 weeks. Meaningful modeled OA mitigation with reductions of > 10 mu atm pCO(2) (or just under 0.02 pH units) extends 100-100,000 km(2) around the TA addition site. The CDR efficiency (i.e., the experimental seawater dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) increase divided by the maximum DIC increase expected from the added TA) after the first 3 years is 0.96 & PLUSMN; 0.01, reflecting essentially complete air-sea CO2 adjustment to the additional TA. This high efficiency is potentially a unique feature of the Bering Sea related to the shallow depths and mixed layer depths. The ratio of DIC increase to the TA added is also high (& GE;0.85) due to the high dissolved carbon content of seawater in the Bering Sea. The air-sea gas exchange adjustment requires 3.6 months to become (> 95%) complete, so the signal in dissolved carbon concentrations will likely be undetectable amid natural variability after dilution by ocean mixing. We therefore argue that modeling, on a range of scales, will need to play a major role in assessing the impacts of OAE interventions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available